Margaret Grey DrPH, RN, FAAN

Departments & Organizations

Biography

Margaret Grey, DrPH, RN, FAAN is the
Dean and Annie W. Goodrich Professor at the Yale School of Nursing. Prior to
assuming the Deanship on September 1, 2005, she served as Associate Dean for
Scholarly Affairs. She was the founding Director of the NIH-funded Center for
Self and Family Management and a related pre and post-doctoral training
program, as well as the School's doctoral program. Previously she held
progressive academic and administrative appointments at the University of
Pennsylvania and Columbia University. She holds a bachelor's degree from the University
of Pittsburgh, an MSN in pediatric nursing from Yale University, and a
Doctorate in Public Health and social psychology from Columbia University.

A pediatric nurse practitioner, Dr.
Grey's research has focused on improving the lives of youth with type 1
diabetes and preventing type 2 diabetes using innovative web-based programs. She
has been instrumental in the development of practice-based research networks in
nursing, and serves as Director of the TIII/Translational Research Core for the
Yale Center for Clinical Investigation. She has been principal investigator for
grants totaling over $25 million.

The author of over 220 journal articles,
chapters, and abstracts, she has received numerous regional and national honors
for her research. She was elected to the Institute of Medicine in 2005, and she
was named the Outstanding Nurse Scientist by the American Academy of Nursing in
2008. She has served on multiple NIH and AHRQ review panels, and she was the
chairperson of the Nursing Science Review Committee for the National Institute
of Nursing Research from 1995-1997. She was President of the National
Association of Pediatric Nurse Associates and Practitioners, a member of the
second cohort of Robert Wood Johnson Executive Nurse Fellows, and a member of the
National Advisory Council for Nursing Research at the National Institutes of
Health. She was also a member of the Board of Directors of the American
Diabetes Association where she has been instrumental in developing standards of
behavioral care for youth with diabetes.